It's a miracle I got in

........and probably will hardly manage to again, as I may have forgotten my password ready. After a zillion things going wrong.....including the fact that all my brilliant ideas for a handle were already taken. Great minds. 

I have not been diagnosed and won't be, I don't live in the UK and no doubt more ties to my lovely home country will be cut still further in the next year. 

It was just seen as craziness when I was a kid, in the 1960's. It could be a spectrum thing but it could be something else. The red flags for the A word for me are that I regressed at 18 months and no longer spoke using grammatically correct sentences. Tantrums and obsessions during childhood, being scapegoated at high school and repeatedly being criticised from student years onwards for not engaging in enough eye contact. 

But it is on the other side of the boot too as I teach at a high school for children who wish to specialise in the arts, and many are now getting diagnoses of dyspraxia, dyslexia as well as the odd autism I do feel the need to know how to work with these kids. 

I would love to hear from older people who are only now recognising the hidden thing after all these years. Or from other teachers also confronting similar things.

The most important thing is my art incidentally.

Parents Reply
  • Ah! Sorry about that and I am sorry to hear about your dog too. I can't imagine how I'll react when our dog goes, I don't want to even think about it although I obviously know it's inevitable. He's only 7 though so hopefully It's a long way off!

    No, our ginger cat didn't die. He just moved out. Decided to move in with a neighbour! Not so much as a 'Dear John', just upped and left, little booger. No loyalty whatsoever!! Although, it was around the time we got the dog so I guess he just figured I was an irresponsible cat owner, which was fair enough really. 

    (I actually meant that I have days where I wake up and look like a swamp monster and I can't even blame it on allergies.) 

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